Plasma reactor

ABSTRACT

This invention is a hardware modification which permits greater uniformity of etching to be achieved in a high-density-source plasma reactor (i.e., one which uses a remote source to generate a plasma, and which also uses high-frequency bias power on the wafer chuck). The invention addresses the uniformity problem which arises as the result of nonuniform power coupling between the wafer and the walls of the etch chamber. The solution to greatly mitigate the nonuniformity problem is to increase the impedance between the wafer and the chamber walls. This may be accomplished by placing a cylindrical dielectric wall around the wafer. Quartz is a dielectric material that is ideal for the cylindrical wall if silicon is to be etched selectively with respect to silicon dioxide, as quartz it is virtually inert under such conditions.

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/132,589 filed Apr. 25, 2002 (issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,500,300) which is a continuation of Ser. No. 09/922,587 filed Aug. 3, 2001 (issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,413,358), which is a continuation of Ser. No. 08/823,275 filed Mar. 24, 1997 (issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,290,806), which is a continuation of Ser. No. 08/524249 filed Sep. 6, 1995 (issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,904,799), which is a divisional of Ser. No. 08/048,991 filed Apr. 16, 1993 (issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,662,770). Priority is claimed to these prior applications, and they are all incorporated by reference herein.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to ion-assisted plasma etching of semiconductor wafers in remote source plasma reactors with powered wafer chucks. More particularly, it relates to equipment improvements designed to improve etch uniformity over the surface of a wafer.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Integrated circuits are typically fabricated on a wafer of semiconductor material such as silicon or gallium arsenide. During the fabrication process, the wafer is subjected to an ordered series of steps, which may include photomasking, material deposition, oxidation, nitridization, ion implantation, diffusion and etching, in order to achieve a final product.

There are two basic types of etches: ion-assisted etches (also called reactive-ion, plasma or dry etches) and solution etches (also called wet etches). Solution etches are invariably isotropic (omnidirectional) in nature, with the etch rate for a single material being relatively constant in all directions. Reactive-ion etches, on the other hand, are largely anisotropic (unidirectional) in nature. Reactive ion etches are commonly used to create spacers on substantially vertical sidewalls of other layers, to transfer a mask pattern to an underlying layer with little or no undercutting beneath mask segment edges, and to create contact vias in insulative layers.

A plasma etch system (often referred to as a reactor) is primarily a vacuum chamber in which a glow discharge is utilized to produce a plasma consisting of chemically reactive species (atoms, radicals, and ions) from a relatively inert molecular gas. The gas is selected so as to generate species which react either kinetically or chemically with the material to be etched. Because dielectric layers cannot be etched using a direct-current-induced glow discharge due to charge accumulation on the surface of the dielectric which quickly neutralizes the dc-voltage potential, most reactors are designed as radio-frequency diode systems and typically operate at a frequency of 13.56 MHz, a frequency reserved for non-communication use by international agreement. However, plasma etch processes operating between 100 KHz-80 MHz have been used successfully.

The first ionization potential of most gas atoms and molecules is 8 eV and greater. Since plasma electrons have a distribution whose average energy is between 1 to 10 eV, some of these electrons will have sufficient energy to cause ionization of the gas molecules. Collisions of these energized electrons with neutral gas molecules are primarily responsible for the production of the reactive species in a plasma. The reactive species, however, can also react among themselves in the plasma and alter the overall plasma chemistry.

Since plasmas consisting of fluorine-containing gases are extensively used for etching silicon, silicon dioxide, and other materials used in VLSI fabrication, it is instructive to examine the glow-discharge chemistry of CF₄. Initially, the only species present are CF₄ molecules. However, once a glow discharge is established, a portion of the CF₄ molecules dissociated into other species. A plasma is defined to be a partially ionized gas composed of ions, electrons, and a variety of neutral species. The most abundant ionic specie found in CF₄ plasmas is CF₃ ⁺, such ions being formed by the electron-impact reaction: e+CF₄=>CF₃ ⁺+F+2e. In addition to CF₄ molecules, ionic species, and electrons, a large number of radicals are formed. A radical is an atom, or collection of atoms, which is electrically neutral, but which also exists in a state of incomplete chemical bonding, making it very reactive. In CF₄ plasmas, the most abundant radicals are CF₃ and F, formed by the reaction: e+CF₄=>CF₃+F+e. Radicals are generally thought to exist in plasmas in much higher concentrations than ions, because they are generated at a faster rate, and they survive longer than ions in the plasma.

Plasma etches proceed by two basic mechanisms. The first, chemical etching, entails the steps of: 1) reactive species are generated in the plasma; 2) these species diffuse to the surface of the material being etched; 3) the species are adsorbed on the surface; 4) a chemical reaction occurs, with the formation of a volatile by-product; 5) the by-product is desorbed from the surface; and 6) the desorbed species diffuse into the bulk of the gas. The second, reactive-ion etching, involves ionic bombardment of the material to be etched. Since both mechanisms occur simultaneously, the complete plasma etch process would be better aptly identified as an ion-assisted etch process. The greater the chemical mechanism component of the etch, the greater the isotropicity of the etch.

FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of a typical parallel-plate plasma etch reactor. To perform a plasma etch, a wafer 11 is loaded in the reactor chamber 12 and precisely centered on a disk-shaped lower electrode 13L, thereby becoming electrically integrated therewith. A disk-shaped upper electrode 13U is positioned, above the wafer (the number 13* applies to either 13L or 13U). The flow of molecular gas into the chamber 12 is automatically regulated by highly-accurate mass-flow controllers 14. A radio-frequency voltage 15 is applied between electrodes 13L and 13U. Chamber pressure is monitored and maintained continuously through a feedback loop between a chamber manometer 16 and a downstream throttle valve 17, which allows reactions products and surplus gas to escape in controlled manner. Spacing of the electrodes is controlled by a closed-loop, positioning system (not shown). At a particular voltage known as the breakdown voltage, a glow discharge will be established between the electrodes, resulting in a partial ionization of the molecular gas. In such a discharge, free electrons gain energy from the imposed electric field and lose this energy during collisions with molecules. Such collisions lead to the formation of new species, including metastables, atoms, electrons, free radicals, and ions. The electrical discharge between the electrodes consists of a glowing plasma region 18 centered between lower electrode 13L and upper electrode 13U, a lower dark space 19L between the lower electrode 13L and plasma region 18, and an upper dark space region 19U between the upper electrode 13U and plasma region 18. Dark space regions 19* are also known as “sheath” regions. Electrons emitted from the electrodes 13* are accelerated into the discharge region. By the time the electrons have reached plasma region 18, they have acquired sufficient kinetic energy to ionize some of the molecular gas molecules and raise the electrons of other molecular gas molecules to less-stable atomic orbitals of increased energy through a mechanism known as electron impact excitation. As each of these excited electrons “relaxes” and falls back to a more stable orbital, a quantum of energy is released in the form of light. This light gives the plasma region its characteristic glow. Free electrons may also collide with species already formed by collisions between free electrons and gas molecules, leading to additional subspecies. Because free electrons have little mass, they are accelerated much more rapidly toward the electrodes than are ionized gas molecules, leaving the plasma with a net positive charge. The voltage drop through the plasma is small in comparison to the voltage drops between the plasma and either of the plates at any given instant of an AC voltage cycle. Therefore, plasma ions which are accelerated from the plasma to one of the plates are primarily those that happen to be on the edge of one of the dark spaces. Acceleration of ions within the plasma region is minimal. Although ions are accelerated toward both electrodes, it is axiomatic that the smaller of the two electrodes will receive the greatest ionic bombardment. Since the ions are accelerated substantially perpendicularly between the two electrodes (parallel to the electric field), the ions will collide with the wafer perpendicularly to the wafer's surface. As an ion collides with an atom or molecule of reactive material on the wafer, the two may react to form a reaction product. Because ion bombardment of the electrodes with ions and electrons causes an elevation of electrode temperature, both electrodes are normally cooled by the circulation of deionized water through the electrodes and an external temperature control unit (not shown). Water cooling prevents elevation of wafer temperature to levels which would destabilize photoresist. Typical plasma reactors consist of a single process chamber flanked by two loadlock chambers (one for wafer isolation during loading, the other for isolation during unloading).

Parallel-plate etch reactors have fallen into disfavor for certain applications. For example, the voltage required to sustain the plasma is far higher that is required to etch polycrystalline silicon or single-crystal silicon. In fact, the voltage is so high that ions are accelerated to energies sufficient to etch silicon dioxide. For this reason, it is very difficult to perform an etch of silicon that stops on a silicon dioxide layer using a parallel-plate reactor. For such applications, a new type of plasma reactor has been developed. In this type of reactor, the plasma is generated in a source chamber remote from the wafer (typically at the very top of the chamber, and the wafer chuck is powered separately from the plasma source generator. Such a reactor is generally called a high-density source plasma reactor. Examples of sources used to create the high-density plasma are: a Mori source, a helicon source, and an electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) source. A description of the operation of such sources is beyond the scope of this disclosure, and not particularly relevant thereto.

FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic representation of a typical high-density-source plasma reactor. The reactor comprises an etch chamber 21 formed by a cylindrical sidewall 22, which is grounded, a floor wall 23, and a ceiling wall 24. A source chamber 25 adjoins the etch chamber 21. A disc-shaped wafer chuck 26 is concentrically mounted within the lower portion of the etch chamber 21. A wafer 27 is precisely centered on the wafer chuck 26, thereby becoming electrically integrated therewith. The wafer may be held in place against the wafer chuck 26 by any one of a variety of known techniques, such as the use of a clamping ring 28, or an electrostatic chuck (not shown). The flow of molecular gas, which is depicted as being introduced into the source chamber 25 through a primary manifold 29, is automatically regulated by highly-accurate mass-flow controllers 30. However, molecular gases and/or atomic gases may be introduced at other locations in either the source chamber 25 or the etch chamber 21. A high-density plasma 31 is generated within the source chamber 25 by either a Mori source, a helicon source, or an ECR source (not shown). A radio-frequency voltage generator 32 is coupled between the wafer chuck 26 and ground. Chamber pressure is monitored and maintained continuously through a feedback loop between a chamber manometer 33 and a downstream throttle valve 34, which allows reactions products and surplus gas to escape in controlled manner. As the high-density plasma escapes from the source chamber 25 and migrates toward the etch chamber 21, its density usually decreases and it usually becomes more spacially uniform. The less dense plasma 35 within the etch chamber 21 receives additional power from the powered wafer chuck during the etch process. Power coupling between the wafer chuck 26 and the cylindrical sidewall 22 causes reactive ions to be accelerated through a dark space that is established just above the surface of the wafer 27, permitting ion-assisted etching of etchable material on the surface of the wafer to occur. The amount of power supplied to the wafer chuck 26 greatly influences etch rates, etch uniformity, and profile control The discussion of ion-assisted etching relative to the parallel-plate etch reactor is also largely applicable in the case of a high-density source plasma reactor.

Still referring to FIG. 2, it should be noted that the cylindrical sidewall 22 is normally fitted with a large number of vertical magnetic strips of alternating polarity, thus creating a magnetic field wall on the interior surface of cylindrical sidewall 22. Such an arrangement is known as a “McKenzie bucket” or simply a “confinement bucket”, and was devised as a means to more evenly distribute reactive ions which were generated within the source chamber 25 and which have migrated downward to the etch chamber 21. This feature is not depicted, as it is not relevant to this invention.

One of the problems associated with high-density source plasma etch reactors is that etching is not uniform across the surface of the wafer. Nonuniform power coupling between the wafer and the walls of the etch chamber can be the dominant cause of nonuniform etching rates across the surface of the wafer. Nonuniform power coupling occurs because regions near wafer edge are physically closer to the grounded walls of the chamber than are regions closer to the wafer center. Thus, higher power is coupled to the walls through a unit area near the edge of the wafer than is coupled by a unit area located nearer the center of the wafer. This radially nonuniform coupling of the rf power to the chamber walls results in lower etch rates near the center of the wafer than near the edge. It can also adversely affect other process results such as feature profile and/or selectivity.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

This invention is a hardware modification which permits greater uniformity of etching to be achieved in a high-density-source plasma reactor (i.e., one which uses a remote source to generate a plasma, and which also uses high-frequency bias power on the wafer chuck). The invention addresses the uniformity problem which arises as the result of nonuniform power coupling between the wafer and the walls of the etch chamber. The solution to greatly mitigate the nonuniformity problem is to increase the impedance between the wafer and the chamber walls. This may be accomplished by placing a cylindrical dielectric wall around the wafer. Quartz is a dielectric material that is ideal for the cylindrical wall if silicon is to be etched selectively with respect to silicon dioxide, as quartz it is virtually inert under such conditions. Any dielectric material can be used, including those which are etchable, provided that they do not have a negative impact on the etch process.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of a typical parallel-plate plasma etch reactor;

FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic representation of a typical remote plasma source etch reactor having a powered wafer chuck;

FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic representation of the remote plasma source etch reactor of FIG. 2, which has been fitted with a cylindrical dielectric wall decoupler; and

FIG. 4A is a plot of the etch rate for polycrystalline silicon, in Å/min., as a function of location on the wafer for a power setting of 3,000 watts for the source plasma generator and about 95 watts for the wafer chuck power setting for both a standard high-density source plasma reactor and a high-density source plasma reactor which incorporates the invention;

FIG. 4B is a plot of the etch rate for polycrystalline silicon, in Å/min., as a function of location on the wafer for a power setting of 3,000 watts for the source plasma generator and about 60 watts for the wafer chuck power setting for both a standard high-density source plasma reactor and a high-density source plasma reactor which incorporates the invention; and

FIG. 4C is a plot of the etch rate for polycrystalline silicon, in Å/min., as a function of location on the wafer for a power setting of 3,000 watts for the source plasma generator and about 31 watts for the wafer chuck power setting for both a standard high-density source plasma reactor and a high-density source plasma reactor which incorporates the invention.

PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION

Referring now to FIG. 3, a conventional high-density-source plasma reactor has been fitted with a device which uniformly increases the impedance between the wafer and the chamber walls. The impedance-increasing device is a cylindrical dielectric wall 37 that, like the wafer 27, is precisely centered (ie., concentrically mounted) on the wafer chuck 26. Quartz is a dielectric material that is ideal for the cylindrical wall 35 if silicon is to be etched selectively with respect to silicon dioxide, as quartz it is virtually inert under wafer chuck power settings of 60 watts. It is hypothesized that power coupling between the wafer and the chamber wall 22 is uneven because the electrical paths from the wafer surface, through the dark space above the wafer surface, through the plasma 35, and, finally, to the chamber wall 22, are of different lengths, depending on the radial location on the surface of the wafer. The center of the wafer is the farthest from the wall, so one would expect power coupling for the wafer's center region to be less than for the wafer's edge. Actual etch rates do support to this hypothesis. It is assumed that the dielectric wall 37 is successful in improving the uniformity of etch rate because it increase the power coupling path for all portions of the wafer 27. However, the increase in path length is greater for portions of the wafer nearest the edge.

FIGS. 4A, 4B, and 4C demonstrate the effectiveness of the invention at a plasma source power setting of 3,000 watts, but at different wafer chuck power settings. In these figures, the circular data points represent measured data for the standard reactor without the dielectric wall 37, and the square data points represent measured data for the reactor with the dielectric wall 37.

FIG. 4A is a plot of the etch rate for polycrystalline silicon, in Å/min., as a function of location on a six-inch wafer. Position 3 represents the center of the wafer, and positions 0 and 6 represent the edges of the wafer. For the data represented by FIGS. 4A, 4B, and 4C the wafer chuck power settings were approximately 95 watts, 60 watts, and 31 watts, respectively. It will be noted that at a wafer chuck power setting of approximately 95 watts, etch uniformity is measurably improved with the dielectric wall 35 installed in the reactor. However, substantial nonuniformity is still present. Although the higher the wafer chuck power setting, the more rapid the etch, this improvement in etch uniformity may not be sufficient for the process concerned. At a wafer chuck power setting of approximately 60 watts, etch uniformity with the dielectric wall 35 installed is greatly improved over that obtained with the standard reactor. At a wafer chuck power setting of approximately 31 watts, nonuniformity of the etch with the dielectric wall 35 installed may not even be accurately measurable.

Although only a single embodiment of the invention has been disclosed herein, it will be obvious to those having ordinary skill in the art of ion-assisted etching that changes and modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope and the spirit of the invention as hereinafter claimed. 

1. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: a main chamber with a sidewall; a wafer chuck for receiving a wafer within the main chamber; a source chamber for delivering plasma to the main chamber; a dielectric ring surrounding a received wafer on the wafer chuck; and a voltage source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the chamber sidewall.
 2. The reactor of claim 1, wherein the dielectric ring reduces coupling between the received wafer and the chamber sidewall thereby increasing the uniformity of an etch across the wafer.
 3. The reactor of claim 2, wherein the dielectric ring extends above a plane defined by an upper surface of the received wafer.
 4. The reactor of claim 3, wherein the main chamber sidewall is grounded.
 5. The reactor of claim 3, wherein the plasma is a high density plasma.
 6. The reactor of claim 4, wherein the source chamber comprises a source selected from the group consisting of a Mori source, a helicon source, and an ECR source.
 7. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: a chamber with a sidewall; a wafer chuck for supporting a wafer within the chamber; a dielectric ring surrounding a wafer on the wafer chuck; a first power source for generating a plasma; and a second power source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the sidewall for directing the plasma to etch the wafer.
 8. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the dielectric ring reduces coupling between the wafer and the chamber sidewall thereby increasing the uniformity of an etch across the wafer.
 9. The reactor of claim 8, wherein the dielectric ring extends above a plane defined by an upper surface of the wafer.
 10. The reactor of claim 9, wherein the chamber sidewall is grounded.
 11. The reactor of claim 10, wherein the dielectric ring comprises quartz.
 12. The reactor of claim 11, wherein the first power source generates a high density plasma.
 13. The reactor of claim 12, wherein the first power source is selected from the group consisting of a Mori source, a helicon source, and an ECR source.
 14. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the first power source generates the plasma at a source chamber coupled to the chamber.
 15. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: a chamber with a sidewall; a wafer chuck configured to support a wafer within the chamber; a first power source for generating a plasma; a second power source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the sidewall to control the etch of the wafer by the plasma; and dielectric ring means positioned within the chamber for increasing the uniformity of the etch rate across the wafer.
 16. The reactor of claim 15, wherein the dielectric ring means reduces coupling between the wafer and the chamber sidewall thereby increasing the uniformity of the etch across the wafer.
 17. The reactor of claim 16, wherein the dielectric ring means extends above a plane defined by an upper surface of the wafer.
 18. The reactor of claim 17, wherein the first power source generates a high density plasma.
 19. The reactor of claim 15, wherein the first power source generates the plasma at a source chamber coupled to the chamber.
 20. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: a chamber with a sidewall; a wafer chuck for supporting a wafer within the chamber; a power source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the sidewall; and a dielectric wall surrounding the wafer on the wafer chuck and extending above a plane defined by the upper surface of the wafer, the dielectric wall increasing the uniformity of the power coupling between the upper surface of the wafer and the sidewall.
 21. The reactor of claim 20, wherein the dielectric wall increases the uniformity of the power coupling by increasing the impedance between the upper surface of the wafer and the sidewall.
 22. The reactor of claim 20, further comprising a plasma generating power source for generating a plasma within the chamber.
 23. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: a chamber with a sidewall; a wafer chuck within the chamber for supporting a wafer, the wafer comprising a center region and an edge region; a power source electrically coupled to the wafer chuck and the sidewall; and a dielectric wall surrounding the wafer and having an upper surface above a plane defined by an upper surface of the wafer, the dielectric wall increasing the power coupling path between all regions of the wafer and the sidewall, whereby the increase in power coupling path is greater for the edge region of the wafer than for the center region of the wafer, thereby increasing the uniformity of an etch process across the wafer.
 24. The reactor of claim 23, further comprising a plasma generating power source for generating a plasma within the chamber.
 25. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: a chamber with a sidewall; a first power source for generating a plasma in a first chamber region; a second chamber region comprising a wafer chuck for supporting a wafer, the wafer comprising a center region and an edge region; a second power source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the sidewall; and a dielectric wall surrounding the wafer, the dielectric wall shaped in a manner to increase the power coupling path between all regions of the wafer and the sidewall, whereby the increase in power coupling path is greater for the edge region of the wafer than for the center region of the wafer, thereby increasing the uniformity of an etch process across the wafer.
 26. The reactor of claim 25, wherein the first power source generates a high density plasma.
 27. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: walls defining an etch chamber; a wafer chuck disposed in the etch chamber for supporting a wafer; a first power source for generating a plasma in a first region of the etch chamber; a second power source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the etch chamber walls for assisting in etching of the wafer, thereby forming electric fields between an upper surface of the wafer and the etch chamber walls; and a dielectric wall around a periphery of the wafer, the dielectric wall extending above a plane defined by the upper surface of the wafer, thereby affecting an impedance in the electric fields between the upper surface of the wafer and the etch chamber walls.
 28. The reactor of claim 27, wherein the first power source generates a high density plasma.
 29. The reactor of claim 28, wherein the first power source is selected from the group consisting of a Mori source, a helicon source, and an ECR source.
 30. A plasma etch reactor for etching a substrate, comprising: walls defining an etch chamber; a wafer chuck disposed within the etch chamber walls, the wafer chuck seating a substrate; a dielectric wall surrounding the substrate, the dielectric wall extending above a plane defined by an upper surface of the substrate; a first voltage source for creating a plasma in a first region of the chamber; and a second voltage source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the etch chamber walls to form electric fields between the upper surface of the substrate and the etch chamber walls, wherein the dielectric wall has a height sufficient to cause portions of the electric fields associated with a peripheral region of the upper surface of the substrate to traverse the dielectric wall, thereby affecting a power density distribution produced by the electrical field across the upper surface of the substrate.
 31. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: an etch chamber with walls; a plasma source generator for generating plasma in a first region of the etch chamber; a wafer chuck on which a wafer may be affixed, the wafer chuck being positioned between the etch chamber walls; a radio-frequency voltage source for generating a potential electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the etch chamber walls and for applying electrical energy to the wafer chuck such that when a plasma is present in the etch chamber, electrical fields will be established between the wafer and the etch chamber walls; and a dielectric wall which is installed concentrically with a circumference of the wafer and which extends above an upper surface of the wafer so that the electric fields between the upper surface of the wafer and the etch chamber walls include portions having paths which traverse the dielectric wall.
 32. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: an etch chamber having circumferential walls; a wafer chuck having a circular upper surface upon which a wafer may be placed, the wafer chuck being positioned with its upper surface in concentric relationship to the circumferential walls; a first power supply electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the circumferential walls, the power supply being configured to supply a radio frequency bias to the wafer chuck relative the circumferential walls with a power magnitude insufficient to generate a plasma above the wafer chuck within the etch chamber; a second power supply for generating a plasma within the etch chamber; and a cylindrical dielectric wall positioned concentric to and extending above a plane formed by an upper surface of a wafer placed on the wafer chuck, the dielectric wall providing an electro-magnetic impedance between the upper surface of the wafer and the circumferential walls.
 33. The reactor of claim 32, wherein the etch chamber walls are grounded.
 34. The reactor of claim 33, wherein the dielectric wall comprises quartz.
 35. The reactor of claim 34, wherein the second power supply generates a high density plasma.
 36. The reactor of claim 35, wherein the second power supply comprises a source selected from the group consisting of a Mori source, a helicon source, and an ECR source.
 37. A plasma etch reactor, comprising: a conductive wafer chuck having an upper surface for supporting a wafer; an etch chamber having a conductive perimetric wall which surrounds but does not contact the wafer chuck; a first power supply electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the perimetric wall, the first power supply being configured to supply a radio frequency bias to the wafer chuck; a second power supply separate from the first power supply for generating a plasma within the etch chamber; and a cylindrical dielectric wall interposed between a peripheral upper surface of a wafer affixed to the wafer chuck and the etch chamber wall, the dielectric wall extending upwardly from a plane formed by the peripheral upper surface of the wafer to affect the electro-magnetic characteristics between the upper peripheral surface of the wafer and the etch chamber wall.
 38. A plasma etcher for etching silicon, comprising: a chamber with a sidewall; a wafer chuck within the chamber for supporting a wafer, the wafer comprising a silicon layer; a first power source for generating a plasma from a fluorinated gas; a second power source electrically coupled between the wafer chuck and the sidewall for directing the plasma to etch the silicon layer on the wafer; and a dielectric wall surrounding a wafer on the wafer chuck, the dielectric wall shaped in a manner to increase the power coupling path between all regions of the wafer and the sidewall, thereby increasing the uniformity of an etch process across the wafer.
 39. The plasma etcher of claim 38, wherein the wafer comprises a center region and an edge region, and whereby the dielectric wall is shaped such that the increase in the power coupling path is greater for the edge region of the wafer than for the center region of the wafer. 